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protein-serine/threonine phosphatase
Protein serine/threonine phosphatase dodecamer, Human
Identifiers
EC no. 3.1.3.16
CAS no. 9025-75-6
Databases
IntEnz IntEnz view
BRENDA BRENDA entry
ExPASy NiceZyme view
KEGG KEGG entry
MetaCyc metabolic pathway
PRIAM profile
PDB structures RCSB PDB PDBe PDBsum
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PMC articles
PubMed articles
NCBI proteins

The enzyme protein serine/threonine phosphatase (EC 3.1.3.16; systematic name protein-serine/threonine-phosphate phosphohydrolase) [1] is a form of phosphoprotein phosphatase that acts upon phosphorylated serine/threonine residues:

[a protein]-serine/threonine phosphate + H2O = [a protein]-serine/threonine + phosphate

Serine and threonine phosphates are stable under physiological conditions, so a phosphatase enzyme has to remove the phosphate to reverse the regulation signal. Ser/Thr-specific protein phosphatases are regulated partly by their location within the cell and by specific inhibitor proteins.

Serine and threonine are amino acids which have similar side-chain compositions that contain a hydroxyl group and thus can be phosphorylated by enzymes called serine/threonine protein kinases. The addition of the phosphate group can be reversed by enzymes called serine/threonine phosphatases. The addition and removal of phosphate groups regulates many cellular pathways involved in cell proliferation, programmed cell death (apoptosis), embryonic development, and cell differentiation.

Examples

There are several known groups with numerous members in each:

(links are to the catalytic subunit)

References

  1. ^ Shi Y (October 2009). "Serine/threonine phosphatases: mechanism through structure". Cell. 139 (3): 468–84. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2009.10.006. PMID  19879837.

External links